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Thomas Willett

Thomas Willett (c. 1607 – August 29, 1674) was a Plymouth Colony fur trader, merchant, land purchaser and developer, Captain of the Plymouth Colony militia, Magistrate of the colony, and was the 1st and 3rd Mayor of New York, prior to the consolidation of the five boroughs into the City of New York in 1898.

Thomas Willett
1st and 3rd Mayor of New York City
In office
June 1665 – June 1666
Preceded byOffice established
Succeeded byThomas Delavall
In office
June 1667 – June 1668
Preceded byThomas Delavall
Succeeded byCornelius Van Steenwyk
Personal details
Bornabout 1607
England or Holland
Died(1674-08-29)August 29, 1674
Swansea, Plymouth Colony (now approximately Riverside, Rhode Island)
Signature

Career edit

Plymouth Colony Fur Trade edit

The early years of the Plymouth Colony were marked by severe economic crises and challenges.[1] Incremental progress was made as the colonists learned the native Americans' method of raising corn and beans, cattle were imported from England and multiplied, and some trade in wampum and other goods was established. However, the major contribution to placing the colony on a firm financial basis and finally paying its debt to its financial "Adventurers" in London was made by exporting furs, primarily of beaver to be used in making hats.[2]

The first record of Willett's long career is probably that of William Bradford regarding the establishment of a second main trading post for the Plymouth Colony on the Penobscot River in what is now Maine in 1629. The Plymouth Colony was reluctantly joining in this effort, initiated by Isaac Allerton, in order to protect their established trading post on the Kennebunk River. Willett is thought to be the "honest young man" recently arrived with the second and last major group from John Robinson's Leyden congregation[3] who was given the task of monitoring the activities of Edward Ashley, the man placed in charge of the trading post by Allerton. This "young man being discreet, and one (Willett) whom they could trust, they so instructed as kept Ashley ... within bounds".[4] It is definitely known that Willett, among others, was deposed and Ashley and the depositions were transported to England for trial[5] in July 1631 after Ashley was arrested and accused of trading arms and ammunition with native Americans.[6]

In 1631, the trading post was robbed of just about anything of value by the French while the "master of the house" was away meeting a supply ship.[7] Willett was in charge of the trading post when the French again robbed it in 1635 and evicted the English; a subsequent effort to recapture it using a ship commanded by a Captain Girling was futile, and the colony gave up the Penobscot post permanently.[8] An account of the expulsion of the English from Penobscot and the subsequent attempt to regain it from the French point of view exists in a letter from Sieur D'Aulney to Governor John Endecott of Massachusetts.[9] Willett's early and continuing experiences in the fur trade provided valuable skills in native languages and frontier trade for use in his later career.[10]

Willett remained active in the colony's remaining fur trading efforts, including being appointed to a committee in 1637 to advise the governor concerning the decline in the trade,[11] and in 1649 and again in 1656, with others, taking over the remaining trading post on the Kennebunk River.[12] He probably spent little time at the Kennebunk River trading post given his other activities, but Winthrop[13] recorded one incident where a potential theft or worse by some native Americans was thwarted by Willett in 1639.

Landowner in Plymouth edit

Willett was "Admitted to the freedom of this society" (i.e., recognized as a full citizen, or "freeman") in 1633/4[14] and married Mary Browne on July 6, 1636.[15] He received several grants of land from the colony in 1638/9 and 1640[16] plus six acres in 1640 for a houselot.[17] As the years passed, he assumed more and more responsibility in the colony including becoming the co-captain of the colony's military company (with Myles Standish) in 1647/8;[18] he remained in this post after Standish retired and for almost all of the remainder of his life. His initial appointment as Assistant to the Governor was in 1651;[19] and he was reappointed to that post many times in the following years.[20]

Merchant and Land Development edit

Willett's initial beginning as a merchant in addition to the continuing involvement in the fur trade may have come in 1641/2 when he furnished a sixteenth portion of the construction cost to build a 40–50 ton bark[21] (ship). In time he became the major merchant in the lucrative trade with the Dutch colony of New Amsterdam[22] (later New York) where his early knowledge of the Dutch language and customs was of great advantage. His later merchant activities included at least some trade with Virginia and across the Atlantic.[23]

Willett's abilities in the native languages led to his becoming a trusted translator and to establishing friendships among the native Americans, particularly with the principal leaders of the Pokanokets,[24] who were led successively by Massasoit, and his sons Wamsutta (or Alexander) and Metacom (known as Prince Phillip). (The Pokanokets today are usually referred to as members of a larger group of native Americans, the Wampanoag.) The colony's desire for more land to accommodate its growing population and the desire for more economic activity, combined with the Pokanokets' desire for English goods, led to a series of land purchases from them, notably in the western part of the colony. Willett's father-in-law, John Browne, was among the founders of Taunton[25] in 1640, and Browne's and Willett's involvement continued in further purchases along and near the eastern coast and northern reaches of Narragansett Bay. Willett had moved to this western area of the colony and became involved in the affairs of Rehoboth by the early 1650s, serving in numerous capacities,[26] particularly after the death of Browne in 1662. Willett was authorized to purchase further land from the native Americans in 1662[27] and again in 1668 and 1669;[28] these purchases led enlargement of Rehoboth and Swansey (Swansea, originally Wannamoisett[29]). An example of a deed between the native Americans and a group of purchasers involving Browne and Willett can be found in a history of the town of Swansea.[30] An extensive history of the early land purchases in Pokanoket area, including those involving Willett, has been compiled by Bicknell[31] including a map showing historical names.[32]

Willett became a part owner with other prominent men, including his father-in-law and a son-in-law, John Saffin, of a large development consortium, the Atherton Company, leading to interests in properties in a number of the early New England towns.[33] Willett was appointed with others to settle a dispute between the colonies of Plymouth and Rhode Island over ownership of Hog Island in Narragansett Bay in 1658/9.[34]

Willett's trade with New Nederland led to further involvement with that colony. In 1650 he was entrusted, along with the English secretary to Peter Stuyvesant, to represent New Nederland in settling its border with the English colony of Connecticut[35] (this link shows the 1650 boundary established, along with those of later surveys,[36] see also New Haven Colony).

English Acquisition of New Amsterdam from the Dutch edit

Accompanying the English commander Richard Nicolls, Willett contributed to the peaceable surrender of New Amsterdam to the English on September 7, 1664. Willett had informed the Dutch that an expedition by the English was pending, and he was a member of the English party that entered New Amsterdam under a flag of truce on September 2 to attempt to persuade Governor Stuyvesant and the Dutch to surrender peacefully.[37] This eventually happened.

Largely because of his knowledge of the native languages, Willett very soon thereafter accompanied a successful negotiating party north to the Iroquois to secure for the English the excellent relations that the Iroquois had maintained with the Dutch. Colonel Richard Nicholls, who was given command of the transfer from Dutch to English governance, sent a request to Thomas Prence, then governor of the Plymouth Colony, that Willett be relieved of his duties to that colony so that he could assist in the transfer. His letter stated that "Mr. Willett was more acquainted with the manners and customs of the Dutch than any English man in the country, and that his conversation was very acceptable to them". This request was granted and Willett resigned his official duties with Plymouth.[38]

When the colony was reorganized with the name of New York, Willett was appointed the first mayor of the town (June 1665) with the approval of the English and Dutch alike; he had apparently maintained a residence in New Amsterdam for some years[39] in addition to his long-establish trading relationships. The next year he was elected alderman, and became mayor again for another year in mid-1667. He was a member of the New York governor's executive council at times from 1665 to 1672 under Francis Lovelace.[40]

Return to Plymouth and legacy edit

One of the greatest services Willett provided to the colony for many years, along with his father-in-law John Browne, was maintenance of good relations[41] with the Pokanokets whose main village was near Rehoboth, close to Mt. Hope. The relations with the colony soured with Willett's absences to New York and for his other merchant activities, and even more so after his death. The military affairs of the colony were increasingly assumed by Josiah Winslow, who pursued a much more aggressive approach. Alexander, Massasoit's eldest son who had become the leader of the Pokanokets, died while in the custody of Winslow in 1662.[42] Philip, the next eldest son, then became the Pokanoket's leader; relations eventually deteriorated to the point of open warfare between the English colonies and most of the New England tribes in 1675. This became known as King Philip's War.

After his first term as New York mayor, Willett apparently spent time in Rehoboth in early 1667 where he was appointed Captain of the town's militia[43] and was the principal in the establishment of the Township of Swansea.[44][45] Swansea was originally part of Rehoboth; they divided after a Baptist congregation originally led by Obadiah Holmes, and subsequently by John Myles, arose and had differences with the existing congregation of the town.[46][47] Among other things, the members of the Baptist congregation were heavily fined for setting up their own congregation and not attending services at the established church.[48] After Swansea was officially recognized, a small group led by Willett was given control over who was allowed to set up residence in the new town.[49] Although Willett's brother-in-law, James Browne, was probably the most prominent lay member of the Baptist congregation,[50] and Willett was deeply involved in establishing it as a separate and recognized congregation, Willett actually may not have been a member of the congregation. Such limited religious tolerance evidently was not extended to Quakers; Willett reportedly was among a group of magistrates condoning a severe whipping of two Quakers in 1658.[51]

After having lost his first wife, Willett married Joanna Boyse in September 1671.[52]

Willett was a given a "halbert" (halberd) in December 1673[53] when an expedition against the Dutch in New Orange was contemplated. The Dutch had briefly conquered New York and changed the name to New Orange (the name reverted to New York after the Dutch signed a peace treaty in February 1674).[54] This is the last record of Willett's activity in the colony.

Willett left a large estate as evidenced by the inventory compiled for probate.[55] When the Dutch recaptured New York in 1673, Willet's holdings along with those of the other English landowners there were confiscated; he died shortly thereafter and these holdings were never restored.[56] Even with these losses, Willett died one of the wealthiest men in the colony as can be seen from the lengthy inventory. Although no record appears to exist indicating that Willett participated in the slave trade, the inventory of his estate indicates ownership of eight negro slaves when he died. The Plymouth court later decided to grant freedom after two years additional service to one of Willett's slaves who had been taken prisoner during King Philip's war and later returned to Willett's heirs.[57] Willett's will left the bulk of his estate to be divided among his sons (including Samuel Hooker, married to his daughter, Mary), along with more minor bequests to his unmarried daughters, grandchildren, an old servant, schools, churches, and the pastor, John Myles.[58] Willett's will was made in April of 1671, prior to his second marriage.

Family edit

Ancestry and Transport edit

 
Coat of Arms of Thomas Willett

The origins of Thomas Willett are not known for certain and are subject to some debate. The most commonly encountered description of his early life from the Dictionary of National Biography[59] describes him as the fourth son of the English clergyman Andrew Willet. The germ of this description may have come from the pedigree of Willett's descendants published in 1848,[60] which offered the theory that this Thomas may have descended from Andrew Willet because the Willett name is rare. A differing opinion exists in Dexter's compilation of the Leyden congregation in the appendix of his work, England and Holland of the Pilgrims.[61] This indicates that Willett was the son of Thomas and Alice Willet of the Leyden congregation. The respective merits of these opinions are discussed by Burgess.[62]

There is general agreement that Willett came over to the Plymouth Colony with the second wave of the Leyden congregation in 1629. There is disagreement however over whether or not he went back to England shortly thereafter for the trial of Edward Ashley who was accused of trading weapons and ammunition to native Americans. The evidence that this might have been the case is based upon a listing of passengers on the ship Lyon which sailed from London on June 22, 1632, with William Pierce as Master as given by Charles Edward Banks in his Planters of the Commonwealth.[63] This list includes Thomas Willett along with the family of his future father-in-law, John Browne, including Willett's future wife, Mary. However, an examination of the original source material by Samuel Gardner Drake, published in 1860,[64] indicates that the original record for the ship sailing to England on that date listed only a few names of the passengers, including only a "Tobie" Willet and a "Jo:" Browne (but no other Brownes). This and the indication[65] that only the depositions of Willett and others accompanied Ashley back to England for his trial are contrary to Banks' passenger list.

Family in the Plymouth Colony and Descendants edit

Willett's parents and siblings were evidently left behind when he emigrated to Plymouth in 1629. His family life thereafter centered around that of his wife's family. Willett married Mary, daughter of John Browne (Sr.),[66] a leading citizen of the Plymouth Colony, and Browne's wife, Dorothy, in 1636. He moved with the Brown(e) family from Plymouth westward, originally to the Taunton area by the 1650s, and later to the eastern shores of Narragansett Bay to Wannamoisett, near present-day Barrington, Rhode Island. Willett had substantial business dealings with Browne (Sr.) and later increasingly, especially between 1656 and 1660 when Browne (Sr.) is believed to have been in England,[67] with Browne's two sons, John (Jr.) and James. Another family connection was with Willett's early co-worker in the fur trade, John Howland. Howland's daughter, Lydia, married James Browne and Howland's widow, Elizabeth, was living with James and Lydia Broowne's family when she died. Both John Browne (Sr.) and John Browne (Jr.) died in 1662, the son ten days before the father.

The children of Thomas and Mary Willet, as compiled from several sources, were:[68][69][70][71][72]

  • Mary, b. November 10, 1637, d. June 24,1712, married Rev. Samuel Hooker (son of Rev. Thomas Hooker) in 1658, remarried Rev. Thomas Buckingham in 1703.
  • Martha, b. August 6, 1639, d. 1678, married John Saffin in 1658.
  • John, b. August 21, 1641, d. February 2, 1663/4,[73] married Abigail Collins in 1663.
  • Sarah, b. May 4, 1643, d. June 13, 1665, married Rev. John Eliot (son of Rev. John Eliot).
  • Rebecca, b. December 2, 1644, d. April 2, 1652.
  • Thomas, b. October 1, 1646, d. before 1671(?).
  • Hester, b. July 6, 1648, d. July 26, 1737,[74] married Rev. Josiah Flint.
  • James, b. November 24, 1649, married Elizabeth Hunt (daughter of Peter Hunt) in 1673, remarried Grace Frinck in 1677.
  • Hezekiah, b. June 20, 1651, d. July 26, 1651.
  • Hezekiah, b. November 16, 1653, d. July 1, 1676, married Ann (or Hannah) Browne (daughter of John Brown (Jr.)) in 1675.
  • David, b. November 1, 1654, d. before 1671(?).
  • Andrew, b. October 5, 1656, d. April 6, 1712, married Ann Coddington in 1682[75] (daughter of William and Ann Coddington).
  • Samuel, b. October 27, 1658.

(?) Sons John, Thomas, and David are not mentioned in Willett's will which calls James the "eldest son".[76]

There is disagreement over Thomas Willett's date and place of birth. The Dictionary of National Biography[77] states that he was born in England in 1605. Willett's will, dated April 26, 1671, says he was then "being going in the sixty-fourth year of my age"[78] (i.e., he was 63 years old, born between April 27, 1607, and April 27, 1608, prior to the migration to the Netherlands later in 1608[79][80] which included those who later became the Leyden congregation). His original gravestone also stated that he died "in the 64th year of his age" in 1674[81] (i.e., he was born in 1610 or 1611)[82] and this is in agreement with the range given in Dexter's listing for the Willet family in Holland.[83] The respective merits of these opinions are discussed by Burgess.[84] Willet died August 4, 1674, and was buried in the Little Neck Cemetery at Bullock's Cove, Riverside area of East Providence, Rhode Island.[85]

Mary Willett, the first wife of Thomas, died on January 8, 1669, at about 55 years old[86] making her birthdate about 1614, almost certainly in England. Her grave is next to that of Thomas Willett. Little mention is found of her in the records; what is there includes her marriage to Thomas on July 6, 1636,[87] and she is also mentioned in connection with her father's will which was hastily written while he was ill in the short period between his son's death and his own. The will of John Browne (Sr.) made scant reference to his daughter, Mary, no significant bequest to her, and none at all to her offspring. Browne's objective may have been to leave his property to the relatively more needy members of his family rather than to those of Mary's branch, as she was married to one of the wealthiest men in the colony. However this might have been, Browne's intent could have been better expressed and the result was an unusual mention in the colony's records regarding Mary Willett's good relationship with her father.[88]

Joanna Prudden, widow of Rev. Peter Prudden and second wife of Thomas Willett, married Willett in Milford, Connecticut, on September 20, 1671.[89] After Willett's death in 1674, she soon returned to Milford and remarried again, this time to Rev. John Bishop.[90] She was born in Halifax, Yorkshire, England, in 1616 and died on November 8, 1681, in Stamford, Connecticut, where she is also buried.[91]

Mary Willett, eldest daughter of Capt. Thomas Willett and his wife Mary, married in 1658 Rev. Samuel Hooker, son of Rev. Thomas Hooker, Puritan divine and founder of Hartford, Connecticut.[92]

There is some thought that Willett's son, Thomas Willett (Jr.), was the major in the militia of Queens County who was a councilor under Governors Sir Edmund Andros and Henry Sloughter.[93][94] According to Hillman[95] it is probable that this Major Thomas Willett was actually a member of another Willett family which had settled on Long Island. They were possibly cousins[96][97] of the Thomas Willett who is the subject of this article.

Hezekiah Willett was killed during King Philip's War in spite of the special consideration which was supposed to be extended to the Browne/Willett family by Philip's followers. This was a source of great sorrow to Philip as reported by the servant captured when Hezekiah was killed[98] (this probably was the slave later ordered freed by the colony's court[99]). This incident also exasperated the Plymouth colonists; special punishments were eventually meted out to Hezekiah's killers.[100]

Andrew Willett spent most of his adult life near what is now Kingston, Rhode Island.[101] He married Ann Coddington, daughter of William Coddington, a governor of Rhode Island. Thomas Willett's interests in the Atherton Company led to ownership of land in this area of Rhode Island, then known as the "Boston Neck", along with other company shareholders who over time banded together as merchants,[102] which included Thomas Willett's son, Andrew.[103] Some confusion exists in the records distinguishing between the Boston Neck area of Rhode Island and Boston, Massachusetts.

Some have claimed that one of Willett's great-grandsons was Marinus Willett, who also served as Mayor of New York from 1807 to 1808,[104] assuming that Willett's son, Samuel, settled on Long Island where he became Sheriff of Queens County and Marinus' grandfather. This claim has been refuted by E. Haviland Hillman in an article published in The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, Volume 47 at 119, published in April 1916.[105]

The descendants of Thomas Willett were numerous. The 'Dorothy Q.' of the poem of Oliver Wendell Holmes was Thomas Willett's great-granddaughter, and the great-grandmother of Holmes.[106] Another of Thomas Willett's descendants is American musician Parthenon Willett Miller Huxley. [citation needed]

The Fire Department of New York operated a fireboat named Thomas Willett from 1908 to 1959.[107]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Bradford.
  2. ^ Bunker.
  3. ^ Bradford (for year 1629), pp. 213–215.
  4. ^ Bradford (for year 1629), pp. 219–220.
  5. ^ State Papers, Colonial, VI: 40, Public Record Office, London; as transcribed in Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society Third. Boston: Massachusetts Historical Society. 45 (February 1912): 493–498.
  6. ^ Bradford (for year 1630), pp. 232–233, in his account for the year 1630.
  7. ^ Bradford (for year 1631), p. 246.
  8. ^ Bradford (for year 1635), pp. 275–279.
  9. ^ "Sieur D'Aulney's Letter to Mr. Endecott, Governor". Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society Third. Boston: Charles C. Little and James Brown. VII: 92–95. 1838.
  10. ^ Philbrick, p. 168.
  11. ^ Shurtleff, I (June 7, 1637): 62.
  12. ^ Shurtleff, II (June 8, 1649): 144–145 and Shurtleff, III (March 5, 1655/6): 95.
  13. ^ Winthrop, pp. 322–323.
  14. ^ Shurtleff, I (January 1, 1633/4): 21.
  15. ^ Shurtleff, I (July 6, 1636): 43.
  16. ^ Shurtleff, I (February 4, 1638/9): 111–112; I (June 1, 1640): 154; and I (November 4, 1640): 166.
  17. ^ Shurtleff, I (August 3, 1640): 159.
  18. ^ Shurtleff, II (March 7, 1647/8): 121.
  19. ^ Shurtleff, II (June 5, 1651): 166.
  20. ^ Shurtleff, III: 249 and IV: 216.
  21. ^ Shurtleff, II (January 23, 1641/2): 31.
  22. ^ Philbrick, pp. 199–200.
  23. ^ Brodhead, John Romeyn (1853). History of the state of New York. New York: Harper & Brothers. I: 525 (footnote).
  24. ^ Philbrick, p. 197.
  25. ^ Baylies, I: 289.
  26. ^ Shurtleff, III and IV.
  27. ^ Shurtleff, IV (June 3, 1662): 18.
  28. ^ Shurtleff, IV (March 5, 1667/8): 175 and V (July 5, 1669): 24.
  29. ^ Shurtleff, IV (March 5, 1667/8): 175
  30. ^ Wright, pp. 41-2.
  31. ^ Bicknell
  32. ^ Pokanoket area, Bicknell, p. 124.
  33. ^ Martin, pp. 70 and 80. (restricted access available online)
  34. ^ Shurleff (March 1, 1658/9): III: 157.
  35. ^ Burgess, p. 162.
  36. ^ Connecticut historical survey map
  37. ^ Burgess, p. 163.
  38. ^ Burgess, p. 163.
  39. ^ Burrows and Wallace, p. 78.
  40. ^ Brodhead, John Romeyn (1871). History of the state of New York. New York: Harper & Brothers. II: 144.
  41. ^ Philbrick, pp. 197, 213–214, and 315–316.
  42. ^ Philbrick, pp. 200–206.
  43. ^ Shurtleff, IV (April 2, 1667): 145.
  44. ^ Wright, pp. 47–51.
  45. ^ Shurtleff, IV (October 30, 1667), p. 169.
  46. ^ Wright, p. 3.
  47. ^ Jones, John (August 1880). "John Myles and his Times". Baptist Quarterly Review. New York: The Boston Review Association. X (January 1888): 43-6.
  48. ^ Shurtleff, IV (July 2, 1667): 162.
  49. ^ Wright, pp. 47-9.
  50. ^ Shurtleff, IV (July 2, 1667): 162.
  51. ^ Bishop, George (1703). New England Judged. London: T. Sowle. I, 136.
  52. ^ Prudden, Lillian Eliza (1901). Peter Prudden: a story of his life and New Haven and Milford, Conn. New Haven, Conn.: Tuttle, Morehouse and Taylor. p. 56.
  53. ^ Shurtleff, V (December 17, 1673): 136.
  54. ^ Burrows and Wallace, pp. 82–83.
  55. ^ THE INVENTORY OF THOMAS WILLETT. The Plymouth Colony Archive Project.
  56. ^ Burgess, p. 164.
  57. ^ Shurtleff, V (November 1, 1676): 216.
  58. ^ Burgess, p. 159.
  59. ^ Stephen, Leslie, Sir (1900–5). "Willett, Thomas". Dictionary of National Biography. New York: Macmillan. LXI: 292.
  60. ^ "The Willet Family". New England Historical and Genealogical Register. Boston: Samuel G. Drake. II (October 1848): 376. 1848.
  61. ^ Dexter, p. 639.
  62. ^ Burgess, pp. 158–159.
  63. ^ Banks, Charles Edward (1930). Planters of the Commonwealth. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. pp. 99–100.
  64. ^ Drake, Samuel Gardner (1860). Result of some researches among the British archives for information relative to the founders of New England. Boston: Office of the New Eng. Hist. and Gen. Register. p. 12.
  65. ^ State Papers, Colonial, VI: 40, Public Record Office, London; as transcribed in Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society Third. Boston: Massachusetts Historical Society. 45 (February 1912): 493–498.
  66. ^ Brown, George Tilden (1919). John Browne, Gentleman of Plymouth. Providence: Remington Press.
  67. ^ Brown, p. 19.
  68. ^ Saffin, John. Personal Manuscript. (As reported by Abner C. Goodell Jr.), Colonial Society of Massachusetts I: Transactions (1892–1894), (April 1894), (58): 358–360.
  69. ^ "The Willet Family". New England Historical and Genealogical Register. Boston: Samuel G. Drake. II (October 1848): 376. 1848.
  70. ^ Brown, pp. 27–28.
  71. ^ Find a Grave Memorial: Mary Willett
  72. ^ Austin, p. 428
  73. ^ New England Historical & Genealogical Register. 89 (April 1935): 151.
  74. ^ Find a Grave Memorial: Esther Flint
  75. ^ Find a Grave Memorial: Andrew Willett
  76. ^ Burgess, p. 159 (Will of Thomas Willett).
  77. ^ Stephen, Leslie, Sir (1900–5). "Willett, Thomas". Dictionary of National Biography. New York: Macmillan. LXI: 292.
  78. ^ Burgess, p. 159 (Will of Thomas Willett).
  79. ^ Bradford (for year 1608), pp. 11–15.
  80. ^ Bunker, pp. 188–201.
  81. ^ Find a Grave Memorial: Thomas Willett Sr.
  82. ^ Burgess, p. 159.
  83. ^ Dexter, p. 639.
  84. ^ Burgess, pp. 158–159.
  85. ^ Brown, p. 26.
  86. ^ Brown, p. 26.
  87. ^ Shurtleff, I (July 6, 1636): 43.
  88. ^ Brown, p. 22.
  89. ^ Prudden, Lillian Eliza (1901). Peter Prudden: a story of his life and New Haven and Milford, Conn. New Haven, Conn.: Tuttle, Morehouse and Taylor. p. 56.
  90. ^ Prudden, Lillian Eliza (1901). Peter Prudden: a story of his life and New Haven and Milford, Conn. New Haven, Conn.: Tuttle, Morehouse and Taylor. p. 58.
  91. ^ Find a Grave Memorials: Joanna Boyse Bishop.
  92. ^ Hooker, Edward, and Margaret Huntington Hooker (ed.) (1908). The Descendants of Rev. Thomas Hooker, 1586–1908. Rochester, N.Y.: Margaret Huntington Hooker. pp. 10–12, 18–19, and 22–23.
  93. ^ Reynolds, Cuyler (ed.) (1911). Hudson-Mohawk Genealogical and Family Memoirs. New York: Lewis Historical Publishing Company. I: 254–255.
  94. ^ Burrows and Wallace, p. 101.
  95. ^ Hillman, E. Haviland. "Ancestry of Colonel Marius Willett". The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record. XLVII (April 1916): 120.
  96. ^ The Willets family of Long Island
  97. ^ Willett Family of Long Island
  98. ^ Philbrick, pp. 315–316.
  99. ^ Shurtleff, V (November 1, 1676): 216.
  100. ^ Brown, pp. 27–28.
  101. ^ Austin, p. 428.
  102. ^ Martin, pp. 68–70, 80–81.
  103. ^ Austin, p. 428.
  104. ^ Stephen, Leslie, Sir (1900–5). "Willett, Thomas". Dictionary of National Biography. New York: Macmillan. LXI: 292.
  105. ^ Hillman, E. Haviland. "Ancestry of Colonel Marius Willett". The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record. XLVII (April 1916): 119–123.
  106. ^ Stephen, Leslie, Sir (1900–5). "Willett, Thomas". Dictionary of National Biography. New York: Macmillan. LXI: 292.
  107. ^ Clarence E. Meek (July 1954). "Fireboats Through The Years". Retrieved January 25, 2020.

References edit

  • Austin, John Osborne (1887). Genealogical Dictionary of Rhode Island; Comprising Three Generations of Settlers. Albany, N.Y.: Joel Munsells Sons.
  • Brown, George Tilden (1919). John Browne, Gentleman of Plymouth. Providence: Remington Press.
  • Baylies, Francis (1866), Drake, Samuel Gardner (ed.). An historical memoir of the colony of New Plymouth. Boston: Wiggin & Lunt.
  • Bicknell, Thomas Williams (1908). Sowams; with ancient records of Sowams and parts adjacent – illustrated. New Haven, Conn.: Associated publishers of American records.
  • Bradford, William (1952), Morison, Samuel Eliot (ed.). Of Plymouth Plantation: Sixteen Twenty to Sixteen Forty-Seven. New York: Alfred A. Knopf (2002 printing).
  • Burgess, George Canning (1907). "Thomas Willett of Leyden and Plymouth, First Mayor of New York." New England Historical and Genealogical Register, LXI: 157–164.
  • Burrows, Edwin and Wallace, Mike (1999). Gotham: A History of New York City to 1898. New York: Oxford.
  • Bunker, Nick (2010). Making Haste from Babylon: The Mayflower Pilgrims and their World. New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 978-0-307-38626-7.
  • Dexter, Henry Martyn and Dexter, Morton (1905). The England and Holland of the Pilgrims. Boston and New York: Houghton, Mifflin and company.
  • Martin, John Frederick (1991). Profits in the Wilderness: Entrepreneurship and the Founding of New England Towns in the Seventeenth Century. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-2001-8
  • Philbrick, Nathaniel (2006). Mayflower: A Story of Courage, Community, and War. New York: Penguin. ISBN 0-670-03760-5.
  • Shurtleff, Nathaniel Bradstreet (ed.) (1855-6). Records of the colony of New Plymouth in New England : printed by order of the legislature of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Boston: William White.Volumes I and II; Volumes III and IV; Volume V. (Note: Volumes I–IV as reprinted by AMS Press, Inc., New York, 1968.)
  • Winthrop, John (1908), Hosmer, James Kendall (ed.). History of New England: 1630–1649. I. New York : Charles Scribner's Sons.
  • Wright, Otis Olney (ed.) (1917). History of Swansea, Massachusetts, 1667–1917. Published by the Town of Swansea.
New title Mayor of New York City
1665–1666
Succeeded by
Preceded by Mayor of New York City
1667–1668
Succeeded by

thomas, willett, york, fireboat, fireboat, 1607, august, 1674, plymouth, colony, trader, merchant, land, purchaser, developer, captain, plymouth, colony, militia, magistrate, colony, mayor, york, prior, consolidation, five, boroughs, into, city, york, 1898, ma. For the New York fireboat see Thomas Willett fireboat Thomas Willett c 1607 August 29 1674 was a Plymouth Colony fur trader merchant land purchaser and developer Captain of the Plymouth Colony militia Magistrate of the colony and was the 1st and 3rd Mayor of New York prior to the consolidation of the five boroughs into the City of New York in 1898 Thomas Willett1st and 3rd Mayor of New York CityIn office June 1665 June 1666Preceded byOffice establishedSucceeded byThomas DelavallIn office June 1667 June 1668Preceded byThomas DelavallSucceeded byCornelius Van SteenwykPersonal detailsBornabout 1607England or HollandDied 1674 08 29 August 29 1674Swansea Plymouth Colony now approximately Riverside Rhode Island Signature Contents 1 Career 1 1 Plymouth Colony Fur Trade 1 2 Landowner in Plymouth 1 3 Merchant and Land Development 1 4 English Acquisition of New Amsterdam from the Dutch 1 5 Return to Plymouth and legacy 2 Family 2 1 Ancestry and Transport 2 2 Family in the Plymouth Colony and Descendants 3 Notes 4 ReferencesCareer editPlymouth Colony Fur Trade edit The early years of the Plymouth Colony were marked by severe economic crises and challenges 1 Incremental progress was made as the colonists learned the native Americans method of raising corn and beans cattle were imported from England and multiplied and some trade in wampum and other goods was established However the major contribution to placing the colony on a firm financial basis and finally paying its debt to its financial Adventurers in London was made by exporting furs primarily of beaver to be used in making hats 2 The first record of Willett s long career is probably that of William Bradford regarding the establishment of a second main trading post for the Plymouth Colony on the Penobscot River in what is now Maine in 1629 The Plymouth Colony was reluctantly joining in this effort initiated by Isaac Allerton in order to protect their established trading post on the Kennebunk River Willett is thought to be the honest young man recently arrived with the second and last major group from John Robinson s Leyden congregation 3 who was given the task of monitoring the activities of Edward Ashley the man placed in charge of the trading post by Allerton This young man being discreet and one Willett whom they could trust they so instructed as kept Ashley within bounds 4 It is definitely known that Willett among others was deposed and Ashley and the depositions were transported to England for trial 5 in July 1631 after Ashley was arrested and accused of trading arms and ammunition with native Americans 6 In 1631 the trading post was robbed of just about anything of value by the French while the master of the house was away meeting a supply ship 7 Willett was in charge of the trading post when the French again robbed it in 1635 and evicted the English a subsequent effort to recapture it using a ship commanded by a Captain Girling was futile and the colony gave up the Penobscot post permanently 8 An account of the expulsion of the English from Penobscot and the subsequent attempt to regain it from the French point of view exists in a letter from Sieur D Aulney to Governor John Endecott of Massachusetts 9 Willett s early and continuing experiences in the fur trade provided valuable skills in native languages and frontier trade for use in his later career 10 Willett remained active in the colony s remaining fur trading efforts including being appointed to a committee in 1637 to advise the governor concerning the decline in the trade 11 and in 1649 and again in 1656 with others taking over the remaining trading post on the Kennebunk River 12 He probably spent little time at the Kennebunk River trading post given his other activities but Winthrop 13 recorded one incident where a potential theft or worse by some native Americans was thwarted by Willett in 1639 Landowner in Plymouth edit Willett was Admitted to the freedom of this society i e recognized as a full citizen or freeman in 1633 4 14 and married Mary Browne on July 6 1636 15 He received several grants of land from the colony in 1638 9 and 1640 16 plus six acres in 1640 for a houselot 17 As the years passed he assumed more and more responsibility in the colony including becoming the co captain of the colony s military company with Myles Standish in 1647 8 18 he remained in this post after Standish retired and for almost all of the remainder of his life His initial appointment as Assistant to the Governor was in 1651 19 and he was reappointed to that post many times in the following years 20 Merchant and Land Development edit Willett s initial beginning as a merchant in addition to the continuing involvement in the fur trade may have come in 1641 2 when he furnished a sixteenth portion of the construction cost to build a 40 50 ton bark 21 ship In time he became the major merchant in the lucrative trade with the Dutch colony of New Amsterdam 22 later New York where his early knowledge of the Dutch language and customs was of great advantage His later merchant activities included at least some trade with Virginia and across the Atlantic 23 Willett s abilities in the native languages led to his becoming a trusted translator and to establishing friendships among the native Americans particularly with the principal leaders of the Pokanokets 24 who were led successively by Massasoit and his sons Wamsutta or Alexander and Metacom known as Prince Phillip The Pokanokets today are usually referred to as members of a larger group of native Americans the Wampanoag The colony s desire for more land to accommodate its growing population and the desire for more economic activity combined with the Pokanokets desire for English goods led to a series of land purchases from them notably in the western part of the colony Willett s father in law John Browne was among the founders of Taunton 25 in 1640 and Browne s and Willett s involvement continued in further purchases along and near the eastern coast and northern reaches of Narragansett Bay Willett had moved to this western area of the colony and became involved in the affairs of Rehoboth by the early 1650s serving in numerous capacities 26 particularly after the death of Browne in 1662 Willett was authorized to purchase further land from the native Americans in 1662 27 and again in 1668 and 1669 28 these purchases led enlargement of Rehoboth and Swansey Swansea originally Wannamoisett 29 An example of a deed between the native Americans and a group of purchasers involving Browne and Willett can be found in a history of the town of Swansea 30 An extensive history of the early land purchases in Pokanoket area including those involving Willett has been compiled by Bicknell 31 including a map showing historical names 32 Willett became a part owner with other prominent men including his father in law and a son in law John Saffin of a large development consortium the Atherton Company leading to interests in properties in a number of the early New England towns 33 Willett was appointed with others to settle a dispute between the colonies of Plymouth and Rhode Island over ownership of Hog Island in Narragansett Bay in 1658 9 34 Willett s trade with New Nederland led to further involvement with that colony In 1650 he was entrusted along with the English secretary to Peter Stuyvesant to represent New Nederland in settling its border with the English colony of Connecticut 35 this link shows the 1650 boundary established along with those of later surveys 36 see also New Haven Colony English Acquisition of New Amsterdam from the Dutch edit Accompanying the English commander Richard Nicolls Willett contributed to the peaceable surrender of New Amsterdam to the English on September 7 1664 Willett had informed the Dutch that an expedition by the English was pending and he was a member of the English party that entered New Amsterdam under a flag of truce on September 2 to attempt to persuade Governor Stuyvesant and the Dutch to surrender peacefully 37 This eventually happened Largely because of his knowledge of the native languages Willett very soon thereafter accompanied a successful negotiating party north to the Iroquois to secure for the English the excellent relations that the Iroquois had maintained with the Dutch Colonel Richard Nicholls who was given command of the transfer from Dutch to English governance sent a request to Thomas Prence then governor of the Plymouth Colony that Willett be relieved of his duties to that colony so that he could assist in the transfer His letter stated that Mr Willett was more acquainted with the manners and customs of the Dutch than any English man in the country and that his conversation was very acceptable to them This request was granted and Willett resigned his official duties with Plymouth 38 When the colony was reorganized with the name of New York Willett was appointed the first mayor of the town June 1665 with the approval of the English and Dutch alike he had apparently maintained a residence in New Amsterdam for some years 39 in addition to his long establish trading relationships The next year he was elected alderman and became mayor again for another year in mid 1667 He was a member of the New York governor s executive council at times from 1665 to 1672 under Francis Lovelace 40 Return to Plymouth and legacy edit One of the greatest services Willett provided to the colony for many years along with his father in law John Browne was maintenance of good relations 41 with the Pokanokets whose main village was near Rehoboth close to Mt Hope The relations with the colony soured with Willett s absences to New York and for his other merchant activities and even more so after his death The military affairs of the colony were increasingly assumed by Josiah Winslow who pursued a much more aggressive approach Alexander Massasoit s eldest son who had become the leader of the Pokanokets died while in the custody of Winslow in 1662 42 Philip the next eldest son then became the Pokanoket s leader relations eventually deteriorated to the point of open warfare between the English colonies and most of the New England tribes in 1675 This became known as King Philip s War After his first term as New York mayor Willett apparently spent time in Rehoboth in early 1667 where he was appointed Captain of the town s militia 43 and was the principal in the establishment of the Township of Swansea 44 45 Swansea was originally part of Rehoboth they divided after a Baptist congregation originally led by Obadiah Holmes and subsequently by John Myles arose and had differences with the existing congregation of the town 46 47 Among other things the members of the Baptist congregation were heavily fined for setting up their own congregation and not attending services at the established church 48 After Swansea was officially recognized a small group led by Willett was given control over who was allowed to set up residence in the new town 49 Although Willett s brother in law James Browne was probably the most prominent lay member of the Baptist congregation 50 and Willett was deeply involved in establishing it as a separate and recognized congregation Willett actually may not have been a member of the congregation Such limited religious tolerance evidently was not extended to Quakers Willett reportedly was among a group of magistrates condoning a severe whipping of two Quakers in 1658 51 After having lost his first wife Willett married Joanna Boyse in September 1671 52 Willett was a given a halbert halberd in December 1673 53 when an expedition against the Dutch in New Orange was contemplated The Dutch had briefly conquered New York and changed the name to New Orange the name reverted to New York after the Dutch signed a peace treaty in February 1674 54 This is the last record of Willett s activity in the colony Willett left a large estate as evidenced by the inventory compiled for probate 55 When the Dutch recaptured New York in 1673 Willet s holdings along with those of the other English landowners there were confiscated he died shortly thereafter and these holdings were never restored 56 Even with these losses Willett died one of the wealthiest men in the colony as can be seen from the lengthy inventory Although no record appears to exist indicating that Willett participated in the slave trade the inventory of his estate indicates ownership of eight negro slaves when he died The Plymouth court later decided to grant freedom after two years additional service to one of Willett s slaves who had been taken prisoner during King Philip s war and later returned to Willett s heirs 57 Willett s will left the bulk of his estate to be divided among his sons including Samuel Hooker married to his daughter Mary along with more minor bequests to his unmarried daughters grandchildren an old servant schools churches and the pastor John Myles 58 Willett s will was made in April of 1671 prior to his second marriage Family editAncestry and Transport edit nbsp Coat of Arms of Thomas WillettThe origins of Thomas Willett are not known for certain and are subject to some debate The most commonly encountered description of his early life from the Dictionary of National Biography 59 describes him as the fourth son of the English clergyman Andrew Willet The germ of this description may have come from the pedigree of Willett s descendants published in 1848 60 which offered the theory that this Thomas may have descended from Andrew Willet because the Willett name is rare A differing opinion exists in Dexter s compilation of the Leyden congregation in the appendix of his work England and Holland of the Pilgrims 61 This indicates that Willett was the son of Thomas and Alice Willet of the Leyden congregation The respective merits of these opinions are discussed by Burgess 62 There is general agreement that Willett came over to the Plymouth Colony with the second wave of the Leyden congregation in 1629 There is disagreement however over whether or not he went back to England shortly thereafter for the trial of Edward Ashley who was accused of trading weapons and ammunition to native Americans The evidence that this might have been the case is based upon a listing of passengers on the ship Lyon which sailed from London on June 22 1632 with William Pierce as Master as given by Charles Edward Banks in his Planters of the Commonwealth 63 This list includes Thomas Willett along with the family of his future father in law John Browne including Willett s future wife Mary However an examination of the original source material by Samuel Gardner Drake published in 1860 64 indicates that the original record for the ship sailing to England on that date listed only a few names of the passengers including only a Tobie Willet and a Jo Browne but no other Brownes This and the indication 65 that only the depositions of Willett and others accompanied Ashley back to England for his trial are contrary to Banks passenger list Family in the Plymouth Colony and Descendants edit Willett s parents and siblings were evidently left behind when he emigrated to Plymouth in 1629 His family life thereafter centered around that of his wife s family Willett married Mary daughter of John Browne Sr 66 a leading citizen of the Plymouth Colony and Browne s wife Dorothy in 1636 He moved with the Brown e family from Plymouth westward originally to the Taunton area by the 1650s and later to the eastern shores of Narragansett Bay to Wannamoisett near present day Barrington Rhode Island Willett had substantial business dealings with Browne Sr and later increasingly especially between 1656 and 1660 when Browne Sr is believed to have been in England 67 with Browne s two sons John Jr and James Another family connection was with Willett s early co worker in the fur trade John Howland Howland s daughter Lydia married James Browne and Howland s widow Elizabeth was living with James and Lydia Broowne s family when she died Both John Browne Sr and John Browne Jr died in 1662 the son ten days before the father The children of Thomas and Mary Willet as compiled from several sources were 68 69 70 71 72 Mary b November 10 1637 d June 24 1712 married Rev Samuel Hooker son of Rev Thomas Hooker in 1658 remarried Rev Thomas Buckingham in 1703 Martha b August 6 1639 d 1678 married John Saffin in 1658 John b August 21 1641 d February 2 1663 4 73 married Abigail Collins in 1663 Sarah b May 4 1643 d June 13 1665 married Rev John Eliot son of Rev John Eliot Rebecca b December 2 1644 d April 2 1652 Thomas b October 1 1646 d before 1671 Hester b July 6 1648 d July 26 1737 74 married Rev Josiah Flint James b November 24 1649 married Elizabeth Hunt daughter of Peter Hunt in 1673 remarried Grace Frinck in 1677 Hezekiah b June 20 1651 d July 26 1651 Hezekiah b November 16 1653 d July 1 1676 married Ann or Hannah Browne daughter of John Brown Jr in 1675 David b November 1 1654 d before 1671 Andrew b October 5 1656 d April 6 1712 married Ann Coddington in 1682 75 daughter of William and Ann Coddington Samuel b October 27 1658 Sons John Thomas and David are not mentioned in Willett s will which calls James the eldest son 76 There is disagreement over Thomas Willett s date and place of birth The Dictionary of National Biography 77 states that he was born in England in 1605 Willett s will dated April 26 1671 says he was then being going in the sixty fourth year of my age 78 i e he was 63 years old born between April 27 1607 and April 27 1608 prior to the migration to the Netherlands later in 1608 79 80 which included those who later became the Leyden congregation His original gravestone also stated that he died in the 64th year of his age in 1674 81 i e he was born in 1610 or 1611 82 and this is in agreement with the range given in Dexter s listing for the Willet family in Holland 83 The respective merits of these opinions are discussed by Burgess 84 Willet died August 4 1674 and was buried in the Little Neck Cemetery at Bullock s Cove Riverside area of East Providence Rhode Island 85 Mary Willett the first wife of Thomas died on January 8 1669 at about 55 years old 86 making her birthdate about 1614 almost certainly in England Her grave is next to that of Thomas Willett Little mention is found of her in the records what is there includes her marriage to Thomas on July 6 1636 87 and she is also mentioned in connection with her father s will which was hastily written while he was ill in the short period between his son s death and his own The will of John Browne Sr made scant reference to his daughter Mary no significant bequest to her and none at all to her offspring Browne s objective may have been to leave his property to the relatively more needy members of his family rather than to those of Mary s branch as she was married to one of the wealthiest men in the colony However this might have been Browne s intent could have been better expressed and the result was an unusual mention in the colony s records regarding Mary Willett s good relationship with her father 88 Joanna Prudden widow of Rev Peter Prudden and second wife of Thomas Willett married Willett in Milford Connecticut on September 20 1671 89 After Willett s death in 1674 she soon returned to Milford and remarried again this time to Rev John Bishop 90 She was born in Halifax Yorkshire England in 1616 and died on November 8 1681 in Stamford Connecticut where she is also buried 91 Mary Willett eldest daughter of Capt Thomas Willett and his wife Mary married in 1658 Rev Samuel Hooker son of Rev Thomas Hooker Puritan divine and founder of Hartford Connecticut 92 There is some thought that Willett s son Thomas Willett Jr was the major in the militia of Queens County who was a councilor under Governors Sir Edmund Andros and Henry Sloughter 93 94 According to Hillman 95 it is probable that this Major Thomas Willett was actually a member of another Willett family which had settled on Long Island They were possibly cousins 96 97 of the Thomas Willett who is the subject of this article Hezekiah Willett was killed during King Philip s War in spite of the special consideration which was supposed to be extended to the Browne Willett family by Philip s followers This was a source of great sorrow to Philip as reported by the servant captured when Hezekiah was killed 98 this probably was the slave later ordered freed by the colony s court 99 This incident also exasperated the Plymouth colonists special punishments were eventually meted out to Hezekiah s killers 100 Andrew Willett spent most of his adult life near what is now Kingston Rhode Island 101 He married Ann Coddington daughter of William Coddington a governor of Rhode Island Thomas Willett s interests in the Atherton Company led to ownership of land in this area of Rhode Island then known as the Boston Neck along with other company shareholders who over time banded together as merchants 102 which included Thomas Willett s son Andrew 103 Some confusion exists in the records distinguishing between the Boston Neck area of Rhode Island and Boston Massachusetts Some have claimed that one of Willett s great grandsons was Marinus Willett who also served as Mayor of New York from 1807 to 1808 104 assuming that Willett s son Samuel settled on Long Island where he became Sheriff of Queens County and Marinus grandfather This claim has been refuted by E Haviland Hillman in an article published in The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record Volume 47 at 119 published in April 1916 105 The descendants of Thomas Willett were numerous The Dorothy Q of the poem of Oliver Wendell Holmes was Thomas Willett s great granddaughter and the great grandmother of Holmes 106 Another of Thomas Willett s descendants is American musician Parthenon Willett Miller Huxley citation needed The Fire Department of New York operated a fireboat named Thomas Willett from 1908 to 1959 107 Notes edit Bradford Bunker Bradford for year 1629 pp 213 215 Bradford for year 1629 pp 219 220 State Papers Colonial VI 40 Public Record Office London as transcribed in Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society Third Boston Massachusetts Historical Society 45 February 1912 493 498 Bradford for year 1630 pp 232 233 in his account for the year 1630 Bradford for year 1631 p 246 Bradford for year 1635 pp 275 279 Sieur D Aulney s Letter to Mr Endecott Governor Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society Third Boston Charles C Little and James Brown VII 92 95 1838 Philbrick p 168 Shurtleff I June 7 1637 62 Shurtleff II June 8 1649 144 145 and Shurtleff III March 5 1655 6 95 Winthrop pp 322 323 Shurtleff I January 1 1633 4 21 Shurtleff I July 6 1636 43 Shurtleff I February 4 1638 9 111 112 I June 1 1640 154 and I November 4 1640 166 Shurtleff I August 3 1640 159 Shurtleff II March 7 1647 8 121 Shurtleff II June 5 1651 166 Shurtleff III 249 and IV 216 Shurtleff II January 23 1641 2 31 Philbrick pp 199 200 Brodhead John Romeyn 1853 History of the state of New York New York Harper amp Brothers I 525 footnote Philbrick p 197 Baylies I 289 Shurtleff III and IV Shurtleff IV June 3 1662 18 Shurtleff IV March 5 1667 8 175 and V July 5 1669 24 Shurtleff IV March 5 1667 8 175 Wright pp 41 2 Bicknell Pokanoket area Bicknell p 124 Martin pp 70 and 80 restricted access available online Shurleff March 1 1658 9 III 157 Burgess p 162 Connecticut historical survey map Burgess p 163 Burgess p 163 Burrows and Wallace p 78 Brodhead John Romeyn 1871 History of the state of New York New York Harper amp Brothers II 144 Philbrick pp 197 213 214 and 315 316 Philbrick pp 200 206 Shurtleff IV April 2 1667 145 Wright pp 47 51 Shurtleff IV October 30 1667 p 169 Wright p 3 Jones John August 1880 John Myles and his Times Baptist Quarterly Review New York The Boston Review Association X January 1888 43 6 Shurtleff IV July 2 1667 162 Wright pp 47 9 Shurtleff IV July 2 1667 162 Bishop George 1703 New England Judged London T Sowle I 136 Prudden Lillian Eliza 1901 Peter Prudden a story of his life and New Haven and Milford Conn New Haven Conn Tuttle Morehouse and Taylor p 56 Shurtleff V December 17 1673 136 Burrows and Wallace pp 82 83 THE INVENTORY OF THOMAS WILLETT The Plymouth Colony Archive Project Burgess p 164 Shurtleff V November 1 1676 216 Burgess p 159 Stephen Leslie Sir 1900 5 Willett Thomas Dictionary of National Biography New York Macmillan LXI 292 The Willet Family New England Historical and Genealogical Register Boston Samuel G Drake II October 1848 376 1848 Dexter p 639 Burgess pp 158 159 Banks Charles Edward 1930 Planters of the Commonwealth Boston Houghton Mifflin Co pp 99 100 Drake Samuel Gardner 1860 Result of some researches among the British archives for information relative to the founders of New England Boston Office of the New Eng Hist and Gen Register p 12 State Papers Colonial VI 40 Public Record Office London as transcribed in Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society Third Boston Massachusetts Historical Society 45 February 1912 493 498 Brown George Tilden 1919 John Browne Gentleman of Plymouth Providence Remington Press Brown p 19 Saffin John Personal Manuscript As reported by Abner C Goodell Jr Colonial Society of Massachusetts I Transactions 1892 1894 April 1894 58 358 360 The Willet Family New England Historical and Genealogical Register Boston Samuel G Drake II October 1848 376 1848 Brown pp 27 28 Find a Grave Memorial Mary Willett Austin p 428 New England Historical amp Genealogical Register 89 April 1935 151 Find a Grave Memorial Esther Flint Find a Grave Memorial Andrew Willett Burgess p 159 Will of Thomas Willett Stephen Leslie Sir 1900 5 Willett Thomas Dictionary of National Biography New York Macmillan LXI 292 Burgess p 159 Will of Thomas Willett Bradford for year 1608 pp 11 15 Bunker pp 188 201 Find a Grave Memorial Thomas Willett Sr Burgess p 159 Dexter p 639 Burgess pp 158 159 Brown p 26 Brown p 26 Shurtleff I July 6 1636 43 Brown p 22 Prudden Lillian Eliza 1901 Peter Prudden a story of his life and New Haven and Milford Conn New Haven Conn Tuttle Morehouse and Taylor p 56 Prudden Lillian Eliza 1901 Peter Prudden a story of his life and New Haven and Milford Conn New Haven Conn Tuttle Morehouse and Taylor p 58 Find a Grave Memorials Joanna Boyse Bishop Hooker Edward and Margaret Huntington Hooker ed 1908 The Descendants of Rev Thomas Hooker 1586 1908 Rochester N Y Margaret Huntington Hooker pp 10 12 18 19 and 22 23 Reynolds Cuyler ed 1911 Hudson Mohawk Genealogical and Family Memoirs New York Lewis Historical Publishing Company I 254 255 Burrows and Wallace p 101 Hillman E Haviland Ancestry of Colonel Marius Willett The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record XLVII April 1916 120 The Willets family of Long Island Willett Family of Long Island Philbrick pp 315 316 Shurtleff V November 1 1676 216 Brown pp 27 28 Austin p 428 Martin pp 68 70 80 81 Austin p 428 Stephen Leslie Sir 1900 5 Willett Thomas Dictionary of National Biography New York Macmillan LXI 292 Hillman E Haviland Ancestry of Colonel Marius Willett The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record XLVII April 1916 119 123 Stephen Leslie Sir 1900 5 Willett Thomas Dictionary of National Biography New York Macmillan LXI 292 Clarence E Meek July 1954 Fireboats Through The Years Retrieved January 25 2020 References editAustin John Osborne 1887 Genealogical Dictionary of Rhode Island Comprising Three Generations of Settlers Albany N Y Joel Munsells Sons Brown George Tilden 1919 John Browne Gentleman of Plymouth Providence Remington Press Baylies Francis 1866 Drake Samuel Gardner ed An historical memoir of the colony of New Plymouth Boston Wiggin amp Lunt Bicknell Thomas Williams 1908 Sowams with ancient records of Sowams and parts adjacent illustrated New Haven Conn Associated publishers of American records Bradford William 1952 Morison Samuel Eliot ed Of Plymouth Plantation Sixteen Twenty to Sixteen Forty Seven New York Alfred A Knopf 2002 printing Burgess George Canning 1907 Thomas Willett of Leyden and Plymouth First Mayor of New York New England Historical and Genealogical Register LXI 157 164 Burrows Edwin and Wallace Mike 1999 Gotham A History of New York City to 1898 New York Oxford Bunker Nick 2010 Making Haste from Babylon The Mayflower Pilgrims and their World New York Vintage Books ISBN 978 0 307 38626 7 Dexter Henry Martyn and Dexter Morton 1905 The England and Holland of the Pilgrims Boston and New York Houghton Mifflin and company Martin John Frederick 1991 Profits in the Wilderness Entrepreneurship and the Founding of New England Towns in the Seventeenth Century Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 2001 8 Philbrick Nathaniel 2006 Mayflower A Story of Courage Community and War New York Penguin ISBN 0 670 03760 5 Shurtleff Nathaniel Bradstreet ed 1855 6 Records of the colony of New Plymouth in New England printed by order of the legislature of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Boston William White Volumes I and II Volumes III and IV Volume V Note Volumes I IV as reprinted by AMS Press Inc New York 1968 Winthrop John 1908 Hosmer James Kendall ed History of New England 1630 1649 I New York Charles Scribner s Sons Wright Otis Olney ed 1917 History of Swansea Massachusetts 1667 1917 Published by the Town of Swansea New title Mayor of New York City1665 1666 Succeeded byThomas DelavallPreceded byThomas Delavall Mayor of New York City1667 1668 Succeeded byCornelius Van Steenwyk Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Thomas Willett amp oldid 1192708323, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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